(flames ignored) You can do a minimal lenny update if you want, I won't stop you.
But there is a good reason to split the library into the textual support files vs code: it allows different versions of the library to co-exist, e.g., libdjvulibre15 and libdjvulibre21. Which may not be so useful for a pure bleeding-edge system where everything is compiled against the latest-and-greatest, which is what developers usually have; but is useful for smooth upgrades and for configurations of many of our typical "stable" users. Although this is a library it is not a "core" library: it is used by only a handful of packages, and all work fine with the latest version. The truth is that lenny users would be better off with the latest version, and it is pretty easy to check and see that it doesn't break anything. --Barak. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]